All Hallows was under the gun, fighting for survival. GoFundMe was but one way of donating. In the final statement of the "Help Save All Hallows High School" page the school's president, Ron Schutte, states, "As a 501(c)(3) organization, donations are generally non-refundable per GoFundMe policy. Donors will have received a tax receipt from PayPal Giving Fund at the time of their donation. These funds are typically irrevocable and undesignated, meaning that refunds could have tax implications for both the charity and the donor."
So here are my concerns about rasing funds to "save". a parish, a school, a church:
- Should causes present explicit operational definitions of "save" so donors have a clearer sense of what they are backing?
- Should causes raise money for specific phases of an endeavor, like having engineering consultations and estimates for repair, canonical appeals, landmark designation so they can contribute to the phase that they believe is the most effective?
Very often the parishes, churches and schools that we are trying to save were built on the backs of donors with empty pockets: working extra shifts, eating mustard sandwiches, etc, to create something that they believed in strongly and thought would endure for generations of their descendants.
Now the descendants, literal and figurative, are engaged in the same process to maintain and save these entities. While there may be some well-heeled mega-donors whose motivation may be sentiment, principle or personal advantage, the majority of people contributing to these causes are equal or a few steps up in affluence from the original contributors. They may be brown-bagging lunches or working a side hustle ot put money in the Sunday envelope to keep their parish open or doing the same to pay the parochial school tuition.
An attempt to "save" something this important is a sacred trust. Causes need to give everyone the fullest of disclosure, make the most considered decisions regarding action and give donors the best shot at success because they are giving money out of love. And love should never be squandered.